Dressing The Air is the brainchild of the London-based artist Paul Schütze.

In a career spanning 30 years, Schütze has exhibited his photographic and installation works in galleries and museums around the world, released over thirty albums of original recordings, scored a number of films and performed numerous concerts. He has collaborated with artists such as James Turrell, Josiah McElheny and Isaac Julien and musicians as diverse as Bill Laswell, Raoul Björkenheim, Toshinori Kondo, Lol Coxhill and Jah Wobble.

Dressing The Air is a unique open resource that aims to enrich creative thinking by encouraging a multi-sensory approach. A constantly evolving archive and creative news feed, Dressing The Air monitors and reports on a diverse range of art-forms from cinema to sculpture, painting to furniture design, land-art to perfumery.

Brion-Vega Cemetery

Carlo Scarpa

Venice, Italy

1972

A private walled familly cemetary incorporating structures, water and complex landscaping. His final work, the architect himself is buried here

sight

Scarpa's mastery of combining material and landscape is at its peak here. The perpetual unfolding of surfaces, perspective and unexpected details is so mesmerising it almost overwhelms the viewer. What at first seems almost brutally modernist is dense with discreet poetic elements and sensuous invitation.

"Site is eternal. The streets of Boston, tangled as they are, won't move. Even the skyscrapers must dance to their choreography. In Lucca, Italy, the outline of a Roman amphitheatre lives on in the modern city,"- Stewart Brand , 1994, How Buildings Learn